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Cities and Urban Geography

Cities and Urban Geography. Historic Cities and City Functions Geographic Observations of City Location and Size The World’s Largest Cities Suburbanization and Edge Cities Urban Problems. Historic Cities and City Functions. Cities as location of industry and services

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Cities and Urban Geography

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  1. Cities and Urban Geography • Historic Cities and City Functions • Geographic Observations of City Location and Size • The World’s Largest Cities • Suburbanization and Edge Cities • Urban Problems

  2. Historic Cities and City Functions • Cities as location of industry and services • Cities as centers of social and technological innovation and freedom

  3. Historic City Functions • Commercial Centers - Fresno, Venice, New York • Industrial Cities - Manchester, Detroit, Los Angeles • Primary Resources - Scotia, Minas Gerais, Nevada City • Resort Cities - Santa Barbara, Las Vegas, Marseille • Government / Religious Centers - Monterey, D.C., Brasilia • Education Centers - Palo Alto, Berkeley

  4. Ancient World Cities Ancient Ur in Iraq Oldest cities are found in Mesopotamia, Egypt, China and Indus Valley. Mesopotamia (Jordan/Iraq) • Jericho 10,000 B.C. • Ur 3,000 B.C. (Iraq) • Walled cities based on agricultural trade • Ziggurat (stepped temple)

  5. Ancient World Cities Ancient Athens Oldest cities are found in Mesopotamia, Egypt, China and Indus Valley. E. Mediterranean • Athens 2,500 B.C. • 1st city to exceed 100,000 • Many cities organized into City-States

  6. Largest Ancient World CitiesFrom fall of Rome until the Industrial Revolution Five Most Populous by A.D. 900 • Baghdad (Iraq) • Constantinople (Istanbul, Turkey) • Kyoto (Japan) • Changan (China) • Hangchow (China) Among Largest Before Industrial Revolution • Canton (China) • Beijing (China) • Agra (India) • Cairo (Egypt) • Canton (China) • Isfahan (Iran) • Osaka (Japan)

  7. Medieval World Cities After collapse of Roman Empire in 5th Century, Europe’s cities were diminished or abandoned. European Feudal Cities • Begin in 11th Century • Independent cities formed in exchange for military service to feudal lord. • Improved roads encouraged trade • Dense and compact within defensive walls Paris, France Cittadella, Italy

  8. Medieval World Cities Cittadella, Italy Cittadella, Italy

  9. Modern World Cities A high percentage of world’s business is transacted and political power is concentrated in these cities. • Headquarters of large businesses • Media control centers • Access to political power London, New York, Tokyo • Chicago, Los Angeles, Washington, Brussels, Frankfurt, Paris, Zurich, Sao Paulo, and Singapore

  10. Central Place Theory • Walter Christaller : Markets and Services tend to be nested hierarchies with smaller townsserving smallermarkets.

  11. Central Place Theory • However, transportation and border effects can shift the distribution of towns away from theoretical uniformity. Transportation Effect Border Effect

  12. Rank-Size Rule Rank-Size Rule:n th-largest settlement is 1/n the population of the largest settlement. In other words, 2nd largest is 1/2 the size of largest. Works best in most developed countries that have full distribution of services.

  13. Primate City Rule Largest settlement in a country has more than twice the number as the second ranking city. These cities tend to represent the perceived culture of the country.

  14. Largest World Cities Ten Most Populous Today

  15. Largest World Cities Ten Most Populous in A.D. 1975 1. Tokyo 19.8 million 2. New York 15.9 million 3. Shanghai 11.4 million 4. México 11.2 million 5. São Paulo 9.9 million 6. Osaka 9.8 million 7. Buenos Aires 9.1 million 8. Los Angeles 8.9 million 9. Paris 8.9 million 10. Beijing 8.5 million Source: U.N., 2001 * Note that five of these cities are in the Core or more developed world.

  16. Largest World Cities Ten Most Populous by A.D. 2015 1. Tokyo 28.7 million 2. Bombay 27.4 million 3. Lagos 24.4 million 4. Shanghai 23.4 million 5. Jakarta 21.2 million 6. São Paulo 20.8 million 7. Karachi 20.6 million 8. Beijing 19.4 million 9. Dhaka, Bangladesh 19.0 million 10. México 18.8 million Source: U.N., 2001 * Note that only one of these cities is in the Core of the more developed world!

  17. Megalopolis Illustrates the difference between strict city proper definitions and broader urban agglomerations. To define urbanized areas, the U.S. Census Bureau uses the term Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) or Consolidated MSA (CMSA) if two of them overlap.

  18. U.S. Urban Growth Stages

  19. Megalopolis Illustrates the difference between strict city proper definitions and broader urban agglomerations. To define urbanized areas, the U.S. Census Bureau uses the term Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) or Consolidated MSA (CMSA) if two of them overlap.

  20. European Cities: result of very long histories • Complex street patterns - prior to automobile, weird angles • Plazas and Squares - from Greek, Roman, Medieval • High density and compact form - wall around city or low-growth zoning • Low skylines - many built before elevators, others required cathedral or monument to be highest structure • Lively downtowns - center of social life, not just office work • Neighborhood stability - Europeans moved less frequently than we do. • Scars of War - many wars , many cities originally defensive • Symbolism - gothic cathedrals, palaces, and castles • Municipal Socialism - many residents live in buildings that are owned by city gov’t. Some of these are massive housing projects, others small scale apartment buildings.

  21. Toulouse, France

  22. Ferrara, Italy

  23. Sogne, Norway

  24. Venice, Italy

  25. Somewhere in France

  26. Amsterdam, The Netherlands

  27. Florence, Italy

  28. Copenhagen, Denmark

  29. Europe versus U.S. Cities: Sprawl European cities, including this hypothetical U.K. example, tend to restrict suburban development, thereby concentrating new development in and around existing concentrations. This leaves large rings of open space, so-called greenbelts. What are the social costs of sprawl?

  30. Modeling Cities: concentric zone model 1 CBD - businesses, highest land value2 Transition Zone - poorest people, blue collar used to live here3 Independent Workers - apartments, blue collar workers (walk to work)4 White Collar Homes - horse and buggy, streetcars5 Commuters - no daily contact (lettuce farmers); latertrains allow many

  31. Modeling Cities: sector model Stresses the importance of transportation corridors. Sees growth of various urban activities as expanding along roads, rivers, or train routes.

  32. * The reality is that none of these models, created between the World Wars, adequately describes U.S. cities. Taken together, though, they are useful. Modeling Cities: multiple-nuclei Stresses the importance of multiple nodes of activity, not a single CBD. Ports, airports, universities attract certain uses while repelling others.

  33. * The reality is that none of these models, created between the World Wars, adequately describes U.S. cities. Taken together, though, they are useful. Modeling Cities: multiple-nuclei Stresses the importance of multiple nodes of activity, not a single CBD. Ports, airports, universities attract certain uses while repelling others.

  34. Changes in Cities in the U.S. • Developed Countries: suburbanization • wealthy move to suburbs • automobiles and roads; ‘American Dream’ • better services • wealthy move to suburbs • counterurbanization • idyllic settings • cost of land for retirement • slow pace, yet high tech connections to services and markets U.S. population has been moving out of the city centers to the suburbs: suburbanization and counterurbanization U.S. intraregional migration during 1990s.

  35. Changes in Cities in LDCs • Urbanization in LDCs: • driven by changes in economy • the poor live in the suburbs, rich live in CBD • cities struggle to provide jobs and housing • services overtaxed • squatter settlements common • crime on the rise Populations of cities in the less developed world have been surging: urbanization, migration, natural increase Rio De Janeiro, Brazil

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